This thesis seeks to develop a conception of the political traditions operating in the UK and then apply it to the development of Scottish Devolution. I argue that the concept of tradition has been under-valued and theorized in social science and that the notion of political traditions has heuristic value when applied to British politics. Discussion of a distinctive British Political Tradition has been kept to the margins in explanations of the British political system with only a few authors seeking to explore the ideational underpinnings of the institutions and process of British government and the Westminster Model. The recent work of Bevir and Rhodes has raised the profile of political traditions, however I contend that their conceptual...
MPhilWithin a number of Western nation-states, internal national minorities are advancing demands f...
The purpose of this article is to re-examine the notion of a Scottish tradition in political economy...
Chapter 5 suggests that the Scottish Parliament did not foster new and effective forms of deliberati...
This thesis seeks to develop a conception of the political traditions operating in the UK and then a...
The new context of coalition government and the ‘Big Society' suggests that the UK government ...
This thesis seeks to develop a conception of the British Political Tradition as an idea of democracy...
The new context of coalition government and the 'Big Society' suggests that the UK governm...
This essay explores the significance of ritual in the pre-1707 Scottish Parliament and contrasts the...
A number of commentators have recently identified a 'uniquely Scottish mode of thought in economics'...
There is an urgent need to move beyond a nineteenth century set of ideas about democracy and governa...
12 years after devolution, former Permanent Secretary for the Scottish Government, Sir John Elvidge,...
Since Tony Blair came to power in the United Kingdom in his landslide victory of 1997, and with an e...
This paper considers devolution to Scotland and Wales in the light of current conceptions of the cri...
Devolution to Scotland, in its current incarnation, is a relatively recent constitutional phenomenon...
The objective of my thesis was to explain the specifity of the Scottish electoral behaviour in the c...
MPhilWithin a number of Western nation-states, internal national minorities are advancing demands f...
The purpose of this article is to re-examine the notion of a Scottish tradition in political economy...
Chapter 5 suggests that the Scottish Parliament did not foster new and effective forms of deliberati...
This thesis seeks to develop a conception of the political traditions operating in the UK and then a...
The new context of coalition government and the ‘Big Society' suggests that the UK government ...
This thesis seeks to develop a conception of the British Political Tradition as an idea of democracy...
The new context of coalition government and the 'Big Society' suggests that the UK governm...
This essay explores the significance of ritual in the pre-1707 Scottish Parliament and contrasts the...
A number of commentators have recently identified a 'uniquely Scottish mode of thought in economics'...
There is an urgent need to move beyond a nineteenth century set of ideas about democracy and governa...
12 years after devolution, former Permanent Secretary for the Scottish Government, Sir John Elvidge,...
Since Tony Blair came to power in the United Kingdom in his landslide victory of 1997, and with an e...
This paper considers devolution to Scotland and Wales in the light of current conceptions of the cri...
Devolution to Scotland, in its current incarnation, is a relatively recent constitutional phenomenon...
The objective of my thesis was to explain the specifity of the Scottish electoral behaviour in the c...
MPhilWithin a number of Western nation-states, internal national minorities are advancing demands f...
The purpose of this article is to re-examine the notion of a Scottish tradition in political economy...
Chapter 5 suggests that the Scottish Parliament did not foster new and effective forms of deliberati...